FilmsNoir.Net’s list of the 223 essential films noir. The list is in two parts:
- The 66 all-time great films noir – rated 5-stars
- The 157 runners-up – rated 4 or 4.5 stars
5 star Noirs Click
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La Nuit du Carrefour |
1931 France |
Aka ‘Night at the Crossroads’. Early Jean Renoir poetics. Magically delicious femme-noir and a brilliant car chase at night. Moody and bizarrre! |
You Only Live Once |
1937 US |
Fritz Lang and Hollywood kick-start poetic realism! Henry Fonda and Sylvia Sidney are the doomed lovers on the run. |
Hotel du Nord |
1938 France |
Poetic realist melodrama of lives at provincial French hotel. As moody as noir with a darkly absurd resolution. |
Port of Shadows |
1938 France |
Aka Le Quai des brumes. Fate a dank existential fog ensnares doomed lovers Jean Gabin and Michèle Morgan after one night of happiness. |
I Wake Up Screaming |
1941 US |
Early crooked cop psycho-noir. Redolent noir motifs, dark shadows, off-kilter framing and expressionist imagery. |
The Maltese Falcon |
1941 US |
Bogart as Sam Spade the quintessential noir protagonist. A loner on the edge of polite society, sorely tempted to transgress but declines and is neither saved nor redeemed. |
Journey Into Fear |
1943 US |
Moody Orson Welles’ noir. Exotic locales, sexy dames, weird villains, politics, wisdom, philosophy, and a wry humor. |
The Seventh Victim |
1943 US |
“Despair behind, and death before doth cast”. The terror of an empty existence. Brilliant Lewton gothic melodrama. |
Christmas Holiday |
1944 US |
Director Robert Siodmak smashes genre conventions by unleashing a wild expressionist ambience in a bizarre story of obsession and guilt that has you appalled yet enthralled. Full of bizarre surprises. |
Double Indemnity |
1944 US |
All the elements of the archetypal film noir are distilled into a gothic LA tale of greed, sex, and betrayal. |
Laura |
1944 US |
Gene Tierney is an exquisite iridescent angel and Dana Andrews a stolid cop who nails the killer after falling for a dead dame. |
Murder, My Sweet |
1944 US |
(Aka Farewell, my Lovely). The most noir fun you will ever have. Raymond Chandler’s prose crackles with moody noir direction from Edward Dmytryk. |
Mildred Pierce |
1945 US |
Joan Crawford in classy melodrama by Michael Curtiz lensed by Ernest Haller. Self-made woman escapes morass of greed. |
The Lost Weekend |
1945 US |
‘Most men lead lives of quiet desperation. I can’t take quiet desperation.’ Ray Milland against type on a bender. |
Ride the Pink Horse |
1946 US |
Disillusioned WW2 vet arrives in a New Mexico town to blackmail a war racketeer. Imbued with a rare humanity. |
Scarlet Street |
1946 US |
Classic noir from Fritz Lang. Unremitting in its pessimism. A dark mood and pervading doom of devastating intensity. |
The Big Sleep |
1946US | Love’s Vengeance Lost. Darker than Dmytryk’s Murder, My Sweet. Bogart is tougher, more driven, and morally suspect. |
The Killers |
1946 US |
Siodmak’s classic noir. Burt Lancaster’s masterful debut performance in a tragedy of a decent man destroyed by fate. |
The Postman Always Rings Twice |
1946 US |
Fate ensures adulterous lovers who murder the woman’s husband, suffer definite and final retribution. |
Body and Soul |
1947 US |
A masterwork. Melodramatic expose of the fight game and a savage indictment of money capitalism. Garfield’s picture. |
Brighton Rock |
1947 UK |
Greatest British noir is dark and chilling. A cinematic tour-de-force: from the direction and cinematography to top cast and editing. |
Nightmare Alley |
1947 US |
Predatory femme-fatale uses greed not sex to trap her prey in a hell of hangmen at the bottom of an empty gin bottle. |
Nora Prentiss |
1947 US |
Doctor is plunged into a dark pool of noir angst in a turbo-charged melodrama of tortured loyalty and thwarted passion. |
Out of the Past |
1947 US |
Quintessential film noir. Inspired direction, exquisite expressionist cinematography, and legendary Mitchum and Greer. |
| The Gangster | 1947 US |
Hell of a b-movie. Very dark noir ‘opera’ brutally critiques the ‘entrepreneurial spirit’. Bravado Dalton Trumbo script. |
The Lady From Shanghai |
1947 US |
Orson Welles’ brilliant jigsaw noir with a femme-fatale to die for and a script so sharp you relish every scene. |
T-Men |
1947 US |
Mann and Alton offer a visionary descent into a noir realm of dark tenements, nightclubs, mobsters, and hellish steam baths. |
Act of Violence |
1948 US |
Long-shot and deep focus climax filmed night-for-night on a railway platform: the stuff noirs are made of. |
Drunken Angel |
1948 Japan |
Aka ‘Yoidore tenshi’. Kurosawa noir. A loser doctor with soul takes on the fetid moral swamp of Yakuza degradation. |
Force of Evil |
1948 US |
Polonsky transcends noir in a tragic allegory on greed and family. Garfield adds signature honesty and gritty complexity . |
Hollow Triumph |
1948 US |
Baroque journey to perdition traversing a noir topography redolent with noir archetypes. Audacious and enthralling. |
Raw Deal |
1948 US |
Sublime noir from Anthony Mann and John Alton. Knockout cast in a strong story stunningly rendered as expressionist art. |
They Live by Night |
1948 US |
Nicholas Ray’s first feature. A tragedy of Shakespearean dimensions which transcends film noir. |
Too Late For Tears |
1948 US |
Preposterous chance event launches wild descent into dark avarice and eroticised violence as relentless as fate. |
| Bitter Rice | 1949 Italy |
Aka ‘Riso Amaro’. Classic neo-realist socialist melodrama. Homme-fatale destroys a passionate innocent. A bad girl is redeemed and homme-fatale meets a gruesome noir end in an abattoir. |
Border Incident |
1949 US |
Subversive expressionist noir from Dir Anthony Mann DP John Alton and writer John C Higgin indicts US agribusiness. |
Criss-Cross |
1949 US |
Accomplished noir showcased by Siodmak’s masterful aerial opening shot into parking lot onto a passing car exposing the doomed lovers to the spotlight. |
Stray Dog |
1949 Japan |
Aka ‘Nora inu’. Kurosawa’s ying and yang take on reality informs this 5-star noir: the pursuer could as easily have been the pursued. |
The Reckless Moment |
1949 US |
Max Ophuls takes a blackmail story and infuses it with a complexity and subtlety rarely matched in film noir. |
The Set-Up |
1949 US |
Robert Ryan is great as washed-up boxer in Robert Wise’ sharp expose of the fight game. Brooding and intense noir classic. |
The Third Man |
1949 UK |
Sublime. An engaging cavalcade of characters in a human comedy of love, friendship, and the imperatives of conscience. |
Thieves’ Highway |
1949 US |
Moody Richard Conte hauling fruit to Frisco. Rich socio-realist melodrama from Jules Dassin and A.I. Bezzerides. AAA. |
Une Si Jolie Petite Plage |
1949 France |
Aka ‘Riptide’. Iron in the soul: savage irony, withering subversion, and desolation mark the rain-sodden angst of a young man’s end. |
White Heat |
1949 US |
Fission Noir. Taut electric thriller straps you in an emotional strait-jacket released only in the final explosive frames. |
Breaking Point |
1950 US |
Great John Garfield vehicle with strong social subtext. Much stronger than from the same source To Have and Have Not. |
Caged |
1950 US |
Eleanor Parker leads a great female cast in a dark women’s prison picture with a savage climax and a gutsy downbeat ending. |
D.O.A. |
1950 US |
Gritty on-the-street in-your-face melodrama of innocent act a decent man’s un-doing. Edmund O’Brien is intense. The goons rock! |
In A Lonely Place |
1950 US |
Nick Ray deftly explores effect of isolation, frustration, and anxiety on the creative psyche as noir entrapment. |
Night And the City |
1950 US/UK |
Dassin’s stark existential journey played out in the dark dives of post-war London as a quintessential noir city. |
Sunset Boulevard |
1950 US |
Wilder’s sympathetic story of four decent people each sadly complicit in the inevitable doom that will engulf them. |
The Asphalt Jungle |
1950 US |
Quintessential heist movie transcends melodrama and noir. A police siren wails: “Sounds like a soul in hell.” |
The Sound of Fury |
1950 US |
Great noir! Outdoes Lang’s Fury and brilliantly prefigures Wilder’s Ace in the Hole. Climactic mob scenes mesmerise. |
On Dangerous Ground |
1951 US |
City cop battling inner demons is sent to ‘Siberia’. A film of dark beauty and haunting characterisations. |
The Prowler |
1951 US |
Van Heflin is homme-fatale in Tumbo thriller. Director Losey is unforgiving. Each squalid act is suffocatingly framed. |
Ace in the Hole |
1952 US |
A savage critique of a corrupted and corrupting modern mass media. Billy Wilder’s best movie. Kirk Douglas owns it. |
Clash By Night |
1952 US |
Cheating wife Stanwyck faces the music. Fritz Lang puts sexual license and existential entitlement on trial and wins. |
The Big Heat |
1953 US |
Gloria Grahame as existential hero in Fritz Lang’s brooding socio-realist noir critique. |
Crime Wave |
1954 US |
Andre de Toth noir masterwork set on the streets of LA is so authentic it plays for real with each character deeply drawn. |
Kiss Me Deadly |
1955 US |
Anti-fascist Hollywood Dada. Aldrich’s surreal noir a totally weird yet compelling exploration of urban paranoia. |
Rififi |
1955 France |
Dassin’s classic heist thriller culminating in the terrific final scenes of a car desperately careening through Paris streets. |
The Big Combo |
1955 US |
“I live in a maze… a strange blind backward maze’. Obsessed cop hunts down a psychotic crime boss in the best noir of 50s. |
Sweet Smell of Success |
1957 US |
DP James Wong Howe’s sharpest picture. As bracing as vinegar and cold as ice. Ambition stripped of all pretense. |
Touch of Evil |
1958 US |
Welles’ masterwork is a disconnected emotionally remote study of moral dissipation. Crisp b&w lensing by Russell Metty. |
Odds Against Tomorrow |
1959 US |
A work of art from Rober Wise. New York City and its industrial fringe are quasi-protagonists that harbor the angst and desperation of life outside the mainstream – sordid dreams of the last big heist that will fix everything. |
Underworld USA |
1961 US |
Fast and furious pulp from Sam Fuller. Revenge finds redemption in death up a back alley the genesis of dark vengeance. |
A Colt is My Passport |
1967 Japan |
Aka ‘Koruto wa ore no pasupoto’. Hip acid Nikkatsu noir with surreal spaghetti-western score. |
| Klute | 1971 US |
Alan J. Pakula’s signature reworking of classic noir motifs in a masterly study of urban paranoia and alienation. Jane Fonda earned an Oscar for her brilliant portrayal of articulate b-girl the target of mystery psychopath. |
4/4.5 star NoirsTitles with an * are reviewed on FilmsNoir.Net – list of reviews here . |
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| La Chienne | 1931 | France |
| *City Streets | 1931 | US |
| *Fury | 1936 | US |
| *Guele d’Amour (aka Ladykiller) | 1937 | France |
| *Pépé le Moko | 1937 | France |
| La Bête Humaine | 1938 | France |
| *Blind Alley | 1939 | US |
| Le Jour se Lève | 1939 | France |
| *Macao,L’enfer Du Jeu (aka ‘Gambling Hell’) | 1939 | France |
| *Stranger on the 3rd Floor | 1940 | US |
| *Blues in the Night | 1941 | US |
| *High Sierra | 1941 | US |
| *The Face Behind the Mask | 1941 | US |
| Ossessione | 1942 | Italy |
| *This Gun For Hire | 1942 | US |
| *The Fallen Sparrow | 1943 | US |
| *The Ghost Ship | 1943 | US |
| *Betrayed (aka ‘When Strangers Marry’) | 1944 | US |
| *Moontide | 1944 | US |
| *Phantom Lady | 1944 | US |
| The Mask of Dimitrios | 1944 | US |
| *The Woman in the Window | 1944 | US |
| *Cornered | 1945 | US |
| *Detour | 1945 | US |
| *Fallen Angel | 1945 | US |
| Leave Her to Heaven | 1945 | US |
| *My Name Is Julia Ross | 1945 | US |
| *Black Angel | 1946 | US |
| *Deadline at Dawn | 1946 | US |
| *Deception | 1946 | US |
| *Decoy | 1946 | US |
| *Gilda | 1946 | US |
| *High Wall | 1946 | US |
| *Night Editor | 1946 | US |
| Panique | 1946 | France |
| Suspense | 1946 | US |
| *The Blue Dahlia | 1946 | US |
| *The Chase | 1946 | US |
| *The Dark Corner | 1946 | US |
| *The Dark Mirror | 1946 | US |
| *The House on 92nd Street | 1946 | US |
| *Jigsaw | 1946 | US |
| *The Locket | 1946 | US |
| *The Strange Love of Martha Ivers | 1946 | US |
| *The Stranger | 1946 | US |
| *Born to Kill | 1947 | US |
| Brute Force | 1947 | US |
| *Crossfire | 1947 | US |
| *Dead Reckoning | 1947 | US |
| *Desperate | 1947 | US |
| *Kiss of Death | 1947 | US |
| *The Devil Thumbs a Ride | 1947 | US |
| Odd Man Out | 1947 | US |
| *Railroaded | 1947 | US |
| *Shoot To Kill | 1947 | US |
| *The Long Night | 1947 | US |
| *The Unsuspected | 1947 | US |
| *The Woman On the Beach | 1947 | US |
| *They Made Me a Fugitive | 1947 | UK |
| *Secret Beyond the Door | 1948 | US |
| *Blood on the Moon | 1948 | US |
| *They Won’t Believe Me | 1947 | US |
| *Bob le Flambuer | 1956 | France |
| *Call Northside 777 | 1948 | US |
| Cry of the City | 1948 | US |
| *I Love Trouble | 1948 | US |
| *I Walk Alone | 1948 | US |
| *Key Largo | 1948 | US |
| *Kiss the Blood Off My Hands | 1948 | US |
| *Moonrise | 1948 | US |
| *Night Has a Thousand Eyes | 1948 | US |
| *Pitfall | 1948 | US |
| *Road House | 1948 | US |
| *Ruthless | 1948 | US |
| Senza pietà (Aka Without Pity) | 1948 | Italy |
| *The Amazing Mr. X | 1948 | US |
| *The Big Clock | 1948 | US |
| *The Iron Curtain | 1948 | US |
| *The Naked City | 1948 | US |
| *A Woman’s Secret | 1949 | US |
| *Alias Nick Beal | 1949 | US |
| *Caught | 1949 | US |
| *Follow Me Quietly | 1949 | US |
| *I Married a Communist | 1949 | US |
| *The Big Steal | 1949 | US |
| *The Bribe | 1949 | US |
| *The Clay Pigeon | 1949 | US |
| *The Man Who Cheated Himself | 1949 | US |
| *Salón México | 1949 | Mexico |
| *The Window | 1949 | US |
| *Whirlpool | 1949 | US |
| *Armored Car Robbery | 1950 | US |
| *Gambling House | 1950 | US |
| *Gun Crazy | 1950 | US |
| *Manèges | 1950 | France |
| *No Man of Her Own | 1950 | US |
| *No Way Out | 1950 | US |
| *Panic In the Streets | 1950 | US |
| *Side Street | 1950 | US |
| *Tension | 1950 | US |
| *The File On Thelma Jordan | 1950 | US |
| *The Killer That Stalked New York | 1950 | US |
| *The Second Woman | 1950 | US |
| *The Tattooed Stranger | 1950 | US |
| *Union Station | 1950 | US |
| *Walk Softly, Stranger | 1950 | US |
| *Where Danger Lives | 1950 | US |
| *Where the Sidewalk Ends | 1950 | US |
| *Woman on the Run | 1950 | US |
| *Young Man with a Horn | 1950 | US |
| *Detective Story | 1951 | US |
| *He Ran All the Way | 1951 | US |
| His Kind of Woman | 1951 | US |
| *I Can Get It for You Wholesale | 1951 | US |
| *I was a Communist for the FBI | 1951 | US |
| *Roadblock | 1951 | US |
| *The Big Night | 1951 | US |
| *The Well | 1951 | US |
| *Tomorrow Is Another Day | 1951 | US |
| *Angel Face | 1952 | US |
| Kansas City Confidential | 1952 | US |
| *Scandal Sheet | 1952 | US |
| *The Narrow Margin | 1952 | US |
| *The Sniper | 1952 | US |
| *99 River Street | 1953 | US |
| *Pickup On South Street | 1953 | US |
| Split Second | 1953 | US |
| *The Blue Gardenia | 1953 | US |
| *The Glass Wall | 1953 | US |
| *The Hitch-Hiker | 1953 | US |
| *Human Desire | 1954 | US |
| *Pushover | 1954 | US |
| *The Good Die Young | 1954 | UK |
| Touchez pas au Grisbi | 1954 | France |
| *Witness to Murder | 1954 | US |
| *World For Ransom | 1955 | US |
| Bob le Flambeur | 1956 | France |
| *The Phenix City Story | 1955 | US |
| *Patterns | 1956 | US |
| People of No Importance (aka ‘Gens san Importance’) | 1956 | France |
| *Ubiytsy (‘The Killers’) | 1956 | USSR |
| The Wrong Man | 1956 | US |
| *The Killing | 1956 | US |
| *Voici le temps des assassin (aka ‘Deadlier Than the Male’) | 1956 | France |
| While the City Sleeps | 1956 | US |
| *Elevator to the Gallows | 1958 | France |
| *Endless Desire | 1958 | Japan |
| *Tread Softly Stranger | 1958 | UK |
| Underworld Beauty (aka ‘Ankokugai no bijo’) | 1958 | Japan |
| *The Crimson Kimono | 1959 | US |
| The Bad Sleep Well (aka ‘Warui yatsu hodo yoku nemuru’) | 1960 | Japan |
| Shoot the Piano Player | 1960 | France |
| Blast of Silence | 1961 | US |
| *Le Doulos | 1962 | France |
| *High and Low (aka Tengoku to jigok) | 1963 | Japan |
| *The Naked Kiss | 1964 | US |
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Wow, what an engaging and useful list! Especially like the pithy encapsulation. I have seen about 50 of your top 65 and will make an effort to see the others ASAP. Maybe bc I am a Mitchum fan, I think Angel Face is top tier, and I’m guessing for Night of the Hunter not to make your top 200, you don’t classify it as noir. I Wake Up Screaming should def be in your second tier, I think, for Laird Cregar’s performance alone, plus some good B&W photography. Great list!
Thanks Todd! Great contribution.
great lists…i think dark corner, blue dahlia and crossfire belong on the first list…
Amazing list. Wow. Just wow. THIS is brilliant stuff. I’ve bookmarked for future reference, as well. Your list and this list of the best film noir movies are now my go-to’s.
Thanks Lara! Tony
Superb list. A number of good films here I did not know about. If I might suggest a film not on your list …. I think “The Suspect” directed by Robert Siodmak with Charles Laughton is another excellent noir.
Thanks Shane! The Suspect is ‘queued’ and you should see a review up here soon. Tony
Great, great list. But where’s the greatest noir film since “Double Indemnity” – Polanski’s “Chinatown?”
Charles two reasons. Firstly Polanski made a ‘genre’ movie that is a segue on noir not a film noir, and secondly I don’t consider it that great a film. I readily admit this is a minority view. Thanks. Tony
Great list and great site! I look forward to watching them all. I notice a lack of Alfred Hitchcock, with the exception of “The Wrong Man”. Are you not a fan or do his other classics not qualify for the list?
Thanks Nick. The list is not exhaustive as I add a movie only afer a recent viewing. I need to revisit the Hitchcock noirs such as The Wrong Man and Strangers on a Train.
Fantastic list, I’ve been chipping away at it for a while now. A few thoughts:
The Narrow Margin had so many errors in editing and the story (Charles McGraw completely forgets about Marie Windsor at the end…) that I feel it shouldn’t even be in the Second Tier.
Conversely, Gun Crazy and The Naked City should be First Tier for certain. The photography and editing in Dassin’s classic are legendary and the lines the actors deliver offer exceptional social commentary.
Gun Crazy just a great movie with great action, acting, and emotion. Peggy Cummins is very convincing in her role.
Hey John. Thanks for your input.
The Narrow Margin was butchered by the meddling of Howard Hughes, and contuinity does suffer, but overall it is solid and deserves recognition for the reasons I cover in my review: http://filmsnoir.net/film_noir/the-narrow-margin-1952-b-plus.html.
My placements for Gun Crazy and The Naked City are I admit open to strong dispute. My reviews for each of the movies: http://filmsnoir.net/film_noir/gun-crazy-1950-not-so-bonnie-and-clyde.html, and http://filmsnoir.net/film_noir/the-naked-city-1948-there-are-8-million-stories.html, give some insight to my reasoning.
Check out The Enforcer (1951) it was off my radar. Directed by Bretaigne Windust (Raoul Walsh uncredited) written by Martin Rackin, an Ensemble Film Noir that stars a plethora of film noir alumni, Humphrey Bogart, Zero Mostel, Ted de Corsia, Everett Sloane, Roy Roberts, Don Beddoe, Jack Lambert, and other colorful character actors.
I had never heard of it before and was pleasantly surprised. The story loosely based on Murder Inc. begins when Rico (Ted de Corsia) the main witness on a murder trial survives a sniper attack only to fall to his death accidentally the night before the trial. DA (Bogart) and his right hand man (Roy Roberts) fine comb the case records attempting to find some other clue against the defendant Mendoza (Everett Sloane). From this point on it’s one of the few noirs with the classic devise of a flashback inside of a flashback telling you how the police investigation was advanced to bust up Murder Inc.
P.S. (The Enforcer) Very moody cinematography throughout that compliments the story and cast, by Director of Photography Robert Burks (Tomorrow Is Another Day), who was known later for his collaborations with Hitchcock (North by Northwest, Vertigo, The Wrong Man, Rear Window, Strangers on a Train). 8/10
Hay Ray. I did a capsule review back in 2010 and it is not here as I didn’t think it was that great… sorry :)
The Enforcer (1951) Bogart as an activist DA pursues Murder Inc in a noirish police procedural. The first time the sinister usage of ‘contract’ was spoken on the screen. Bogart sadly just goes through the motions, but the motley crew of contract killers display a truly disturbing pathology.